• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • About Us
  • Faculty
  • Lab Capabilities
  • News
  • Publications
  • Research
  • Select Resources
  • Short Courses
    • Dredging Short Course
    • Nature-Based Solutions Short Course

GLDD Coastal & Dredging Laboratory

Texas A&M University College of Engineering

Does vegetation accelerate coastal dune erosion during extreme events?

Rusty A. Feagin, Rachel A. Innocenti, Hailey Bond, Meagan Wengrove, Thomas P. Huff, Pedro Lomonaco, Benjamin Tsai, Jack Puleo, Maria Pontiki, Jens Figlus, Valeria Chavez, Rodolfo Silva

Does vegetation accelerate coastal dune erosion during extreme events?

June 14, 2023

A broadly accepted paradigm is that vegetation reduces coastal dune erosion. However, we show that during an extreme storm event, vegetation surprisingly accelerates erosion. In 104-m-long beach-dune profile experiments conducted within a flume, we discovered that while vegetation initially creates a physical barrier to wave energy, it also (i) decreases wave run-up, which creates discontinuities in erosion and accretion patterns across the dune slope, (ii) increases water penetration into the sediment bed, which induces its fluidization and destabilization, and (iii) reflects wave energy, accelerating scarp formation. Once a discontinuous scarp forms, the erosion accelerates further.
These findings fundamentally alter the current understanding of how natural and vegetated features may provide protection during extreme events.

© 2016–2025 GLDD Coastal & Dredging Laboratory Log in

Texas A&M Engineering Experiment Station Logo
  • About Us
  • Faculty
  • Lab Capabilities
  • News
  • Publications
  • Research
  • Select Resources
  • Short Courses
    • Dredging Short Course
    • Nature-Based Solutions Short Course
  • State of Texas
  • Open Records
  • Risk, Fraud & Misconduct Hotline
  • Statewide Search
  • Site Links & Policies
  • Accommodations
  • Environmental Health, Safety & Security
  • Employment